Friday 11 December 2009

Quack Spout MkII: Number Three

Well, not quite as 'bang on' December as I thought, though this podcast has been 'in the can' for a few days... this is the last podcast of the year until the climatic 'Best Of...' one that should hit just before or just after New Year's.

QUACK SPOUT 2.3 - MP3

Playlist:

Battle For Prague - I See A Ghost
Common Deflection Problems - Reharse My Soul
Ursine Vulpine - The Man From The Sleepy Village Town
Haunted Stereo - To Be Good
Houka Monks - Strange Things
Richie Syrett - Mondays Always Come
Air To Achilles - Holy Ghost
The Carletones - Release Me
Dam Mantle (Animals + War) - Veils
Charlotte Gainsbourg (feat. Beck) - Heaven Can Wait
Napoleon IIIrd - The Strong Nuclear Force
Like Wow (feat. Thomas Truax) - Old Man Santa


Also Check Out:

Maps Christmas Calendar.
Das Wanderlust's Charity Xmas Single.

Saturday 14 November 2009

Quack Spout MkII: Number Two

Despite my personal belief that I would finally be able to get things 'on track' and be more timely with this podcast (and my backlog of demo reviews) it's taken me half of November to finally get this month's show together. But, by way of compensation, it's a really great roster of bands this month, so it's well worth the wait!

QUACK SPOUT 2.2 - Mp3

Playlist:

The Darlingtons - Rainbows
Relation - Way Outside
Ellis James - I Found What I Lost When I Died
Django Spears - Genie In A Bottle
Video Nasties - Old Flowers
Colourmusic - Spring Song
Kick To Kill - Cut Me
The Hornblower Brothers - Middle Class Hero
Mr. Cricket - Lithorians
Motorcycle Display Team - Beneath The Flowerbeds
Nosferatu D2 - 2 People 0 Superpowers
Tearjerker - Scream
Little My - Panic At The Museum
The Echo Session - Tell Me
Untied States - Wrestling With Entropy In The Rehabbed Factory

Also check out:

Respond (Again!)
Sore Thumb Records

Monday 5 October 2009

Quack Spout MkII: Number One

After time off to sort many, many things out (still sorting mind) I have managed to record a brand spanking new Quack Spout. Not much else to say about it, other than it's full of great music, and it's a very eclectic line-up this month. Enjoy!

QUACK SPOUT 2.1 - MP3

Playlist:

Stylusboy
- Stopclock
Mlini - Monkey Say Monkey Do
Lowstar - Waves
Gindrinker - Gorsedd
The Honey Den - Beyond That Way
Glitches - 13th Labour
Pocket Promise - Deja Vu
Los Salvadores - No Heroes
Haunted Stereo - Cross The Sea
Arabella - Overdose
The Grizzly Owls - I Am A Shootist
Los Campesinos! - The Sea Is A Good Place To Think Of The Future
The Low Anthem - To Ohio
Euros Childs - How Do You Do

Also check out:

Respond
Amnesty Brighton
Los Campesinos! Video

Sunday 6 September 2009

An Explanation...

Obviously Quack Spout has been absent from podcastage for a few weeks now, and I've also been rather behind on my demo reviews for God is in the TV, and this is due a general state of rather busy-ness and some 'life altering' occurences that have, er, occured. Basically and broadly, I've moved from Brighton to a sofa in London...

But, fear not, Quack Spout is not an ex-parrot. No, m'am. Instead I've re-evaluated it and figured that if it were a once monthly podcast then I can make sure I'm bringing you the very best new, unsigned, independent music amassed from four weeks worth of demo reviews as opposed to really trying to cobble together 12/13 tracks every single week.

So, I'm going to take September off in an effort to adjust to sofa life and Quack Spout will be back, bright eyed and bushy tailed in October.

See you soon! x

Tuesday 11 August 2009

Quack Spout #14

A bit of a hastily muttered Spout with some damn fine tunes.

QUACK SPOUT #14 - MP3

Playlist:

Jaydiohead - 99 Anthems
Steve Halliday - The Trees
Draw Me Stories - The You & Me Theatre
Crocodiles - I Wanna Kill
Apologies, I Have None - Bent Strings
Neuschwanstein - The Whole Sorry Mess
k-os - I Wish I Knew Natalie Portman
Aidan Smith - Words Waltz Like Flies
The Polyphonic Spree - Blurry
Chickenhawk - I Hate This, Do You Like It?
Scott Warren - Laugh Through The Pain
The Mountain Goats - Genesis 3:23

Tuesday 4 August 2009

Quack Spout #13

Download it, listen to it, smell it, whatever you like, it's a free country:

QUACK SPOUT #13 - MP3

Playlist:

Tiger Shadow - W'happen
I Remember Tapes - All I Know
Revengine - F(r)iend
M - Le Bapteme
Sullem Voe - California
Silence At Sea - Tell It To The King
The Cess Allan Band - Stanford
Unfinished Drawings - Currents
Campo-Formio - El Joke
Half-Handed Cloud - Feed Your Sheep a Burning Lamp
Monster Island - Getting Warmer
Coeur de Pirate - Comme Des Enfants

Sunday 26 July 2009

Quack Spout #12

Good morning! I haven't been sleeping much of late, which means this Sunday's Quack Spout can be online nice and early to accompany hangovers and Sunday Roasts.

QUACK SPOUT #12 - MP3

Playlist:

Striking Minors - This Offer Excludes Northern Ireland
Blacklisters - Swords
Alex Valentine - Ghost
Connan and the Mockasins - Starlett Johansson
The Ascension - Temperament
Venus Mischiefs - Russian Bar
Toby Wainwright Johns - Pressed Flowers
Blue Wall - Efforts To Change Somebody
Lion O'Brien - This Is Our Time
Bowerbirds - Northern Lights
Loz Jones - Idiot Room
Son Capson - Vertical India
Rivulets - Win or Lose

Thursday 16 July 2009

Quack Spout #11

Well, it's been a busy few weeks for me post-Glastonbury and at long last I have had some spare time to record another podcast with plenty of fantastic music, have a listen:

QUACK SPOUT #11 - MP3

Playlist:

Street Chant feat MC Stormtroopa - Black or White
Pocket Promise - Talkovertalking
The Little Darlings - Time and Chance
YouNoGoDie - Last Night a DJ Saved My Wife
The Victorian English Gentlemens Club - Parrot
Kelley Polar - Magic Dance
The Carletons - On To A Winner
Oxygen Thief - Too Many Trees
Pilots - Alarms
Science Bastard - Nail
Monster Island - The Blues Empire
Stornoway - Zorbing

Download the entire Michael Jackson tribute 'Moonlight, Good Times & Boogie' (featuring 1995, Golden Axe, Connan Mockasin and many more) at Cheese On Toast: HERE!

Monday 13 July 2009

Moviedrone: Stallone

Howdy,

Sorry about the lack of Quack Spout Podcastage of late, been surprisingly incredibly busy! After Glastonbury had to go to Cardiff and after Cardiff went to London and since I've been back there's been filming and rehearsals and all sorts of shenanigans. I'm currently catching up on the demos sat in my room and will get another podcast ready as soon as. In the meantime here's another project that will hopefully become a series (whether you like it or not!):

Friday 19 June 2009

Quack Spout #10

Well, this is a little out of the ordinary...

Firstly this Quack Spout is 2 days early. Secondly I had previously announced that this weekend's Spout would be late. Thirdly it means that there won't be a Quack Spout next weekend.

Find out the answers to all these bafflements by listening to this:

QUACK SPOUT NUMBER 10 - MP3

No Playlist This Week To Maintain Mystery!

Sunday 14 June 2009

Quack Spout #9

Next week's Quackage will be a tad delayed as I'll be in Canterbury for the weekend, I hope everyone can cope! Fear not though, this week's online hoot is here now:

QUACK SPOUT NUMBER 9 - MP3

Playlist:

Ninjah - I Bless The Day I Found You
Oxygen Thief - Camerashy
These United States - West Won
Arrows Of Love - Burn This Town
Ohbijou - Tenderbones
Fol Chen - The Idiot
We Stole Cairo - 10.24
The Silent Committee - Regret
Green Go - Brains For Breakfast
Fashoda Crisis - Martin Luther King Zombie
Draw Me Stories - Comes & Smiles & Leaves
City Wolf - Where Is My Mind?

Tuesday 9 June 2009

Side Salad...

Just wanted to point your peepers in the direction of this:


You can order Hedluv's amazing debut LP 'Cosmic Sounds' from his website for only 99p. That's 99p for one of the best independent recordings of 2008, a magical, nostalgic, barmy and memorable collection of quirky Casio-rap tunes on subjects such as cars, parties, Goldeneye on the N64 and sitting in the garden.

Read my review/interview (reviewterview?) with Hedluv here: GIITTV.

And do buy the record, it's fantastic!

Sunday 7 June 2009

Quack Spout #8

After waking up very late in the afternoon, thanks to staying up watching 'The Plan 9 Companion', I wolfed down some scrambled eggs on toast, knocked back a coffee and proudly present...

QUACK SPOUT NUMBER 8 - MP3

Playlist:

Mikky Ekko - I Love You (I Always Have)
Teenagers - Starlett Johansson
Experimental Dental School - Earthquake
Here We Go Magic - Only Pieces
8bitbitchslap - Seizure
Don't Tread On Spiders - Together Again
Hi-Def T.V. - River's Gold
Mike Bones - What I Have Left
Madame Pamita - Willie the Chimney Sweeper
Foxes! - Who Killed Rob?
Colin MacIntyre - Calgary Bay
Land of Talk - Speak To Me Bones

You can keep up with all my happenings, as mundane and thrilling as those listed at the start of this blog, at my Twitter (Click here).

Tuesday 2 June 2009

Side Notes...

Found out that the wonderful band Bear Driver will be playing at this September's End of the Road festival; an event I was already planning on attending. Really looking forward to the festival anyway, it was fantastic last year, and it'll be great to hear Bear Driver live, I've had their Paws and Claws EP on heavy rotation at Duckpond Studios, and, of course, playing its lead track 'No Time To Speak' on Quack Spout #3.

Also thought I'd take this opportunity to make a plug for Them Squirrels, who I played on #6, their EP 'Them Scribbles' came out a couple of weeks ago and can be ordered by clicking HERE! They've also just played their first few live dates, hopefully they'll be travelling further afield soon as I'm really curious to see how JT's sound translates to a live performance.

Saw Sam Raimi's new flick 'Drag Me To Hell' and was compelled to review it over at Battle Royale With Cheese, and I've written up a review of Animals + War's self-titled demo LP over at God is in the TV, so read that as well, please!

Have a good one.

Owain. x

Sunday 31 May 2009

Quack Spout #7

"It's so hot. Milk was a bad choice."

QUACK SPOUT NUMBER 7 - MP3


Playlist:

Hush the Many (Heed the Few) - Revolve
Shake My Hand - Invincible
The Mega Games Two - The Excitement of David Bowie
The Victorian English Gentlemens Club - Dress (Second Hand with Broken Zip and Oily Smudges)
Those Gay Hippies - Benjamin
Jape - Floating
Beat Radio - Teenage Anthem for the Drunken Boat
Labasheeda - Free Lunch
Safetyword - Flamin' Hoop
Dicks - Kill From The Heart
Animals + War - In a Play Park
Das Wanderlust - We're All Doomed

Also look at... In Transit: Das Wanderlust

Sunday 24 May 2009

Quack Spout #6

You know the drill... What drill? The drill with the power. What power? The power of voodoo! Who do? You do? Do what? You know the drill...

QUACK SPOUT NUMBER SIX - MP3

Playlist:

Haunted Stereo
- Childhood's End
Kotki Dwa - Idiot
Mahavira - Warhorse
Wish You Well - Ice Man
Pagan Wanderer Lu - The Tree of Knowledge
Them Squirrels - Behind Those Walls
The Chalets - Theme From Chalets
PJ & Gaby - A Collection of Thoughts
Suturee - Afraid of Hands
Arkells - The Ballad of Hugo Chavez
Threatmantics - Sali Mali
Midlake - Roscoe

Monday 18 May 2009

Quack Spout #5

Slightly past Sunday (my own personal deadline) but that's due to (a) being out at the Great Escape in order to find some of the fantastic bands contained with this MP3 and (b) performing in a play. Anyway, here's the latest:

QUACK SPOUT - NUMBER FIVE

Playlist:

Stretching Journey - 060
Supreme Vagabond Craftsman - Forest Punk
The Lovely Eggs - I Collect Snails
Liam Finn - I Will Explode
Ultimate Power Duo - Jack the Space/Time Continuum Ripper
Dan Mangan - Robots
Micachu and the Shapes - Golden Phone
The Voluntary Butler Scheme - Tabasco Sole
The Veils - Killed By The Boom
(Attack + Defend - Website Menu Music)
Cate Le Bon - Disappear
We Were Promised Jetpacks - It's Thunder and It's Lightning
James Yorkston - Temptation
Mull Historical Society (aka Colin MacIntyre) - Peculiar

Saturday 16 May 2009

Correction

Unfortunately last week's podcast seemed to have somehow ended up short by about four and a half songs, the link has now been corrected in the post, or you can download the full length podcast from here:

QUACK SPOUT 4- MP3

(I've been using some different software to put the Spout together and thusly had a few quirks to iron out.)

Cheers.

Sunday 10 May 2009

Quack Spout #4

Due to using new software to better 'mix' the tunes and my blah-blah-blah this one took a bit longer to process today, thought I'd get it under the wire, but I was wrong... Also my microphone is making a lot of noise, which hopefully isn't too frustrating and just reinforces the wonky, homemade nature of my hoots...

QUACK SPOUT NUMBER FOUR - MP3

Playlist:

Future of the Left - The Hope That House Built
Connan Mockasin - Sneaky Sneaky Dogfriend
Screaming Maldini - Secret Sounds
Evils - The End of the World
Julian Carax - Under the Sun
The Mae Shi - Run to Your Grave
Samsa - Sweet Disease
The Pains of Being Pure at Heart - Everything With You
The Twilight Sad - That Summer At Home, I Became the Invisible Boy
Emma Forman - Too Late
Misty's Big Adventure - The Kids Are Radioactive
Ben Kweller - Ice, Ice Baby
Holy Fuck - Casio Bossa Nova

Watch the In Transit sessions here: http://www.youtube.com/user/videogesicht

Wednesday 6 May 2009

Quack Spout #3

Back with a vengeance, or, at least, some great independent music:

QUACK SPOUT NUMBER THREE - MP3

Here's the playlist for what will be filling your lucky ears:

Ruby Suns - There Are Birds
The Inevitable Backlash - Silence Comes
Thomas Truax - Escape From The Orphanage
Bear Driver - No Time To Speak
Charlie Barnes - Oradour
Julian Carax - Stay Away (ETMX version)
Alex Dingley - Cotton Wool
Jack Rundell - The Bare-Ass Type
Laura Hocking - Loving Kills
Django Spears - Hit Me Baby One More Time

Watch the In Transit sessions here: http://www.youtube.com/user/videogesicht

Also, here's a widget promoting the new EP Russian Roulette by Ed Harcourt:

Tuesday 5 May 2009

Scooby Doo...

Hi there,

I know you've all been having sleepless nights, but, fear not, Quack Spout and the Podcast still exist, I've just been sans internet for almost a month! But, today I got it back and there'll be a Podcast online tomorrow to compensate for the dearth of ramblings and fantastic unsigned music over these past four weeks, and then things should start getting back to (if two podcasts count as...) normal.

Hope all's well with you!

Owain.x

Sunday 5 April 2009

Quack Spout #2

As of yet nothing has occured to discourage my delusions, so I can proudly (or near enough) present to you:

QUACK SPOUT NUMBER TWO - MP3

This edition features a few more Brighton based event previews, alongside random jabberings and some great music.

Playlist:

Eddie Halliday - Wandering
Fredrick Stanley Star - 500 Years
Pocket Promise - I Burnt The Roller Disco
Elspeth Anne Macrae - Clumsy Hands
Health - Heaven
Das Wanderlust - Humbug
Misty's Big Adventure - Between Me and You
Ed Harcourt - Mysteriously
Muarena Helena - Fragment
The Keys - My Pulsing Compass

Sunday 29 March 2009

Quack Spout #1

I'm dabbling with the world of Podcasting, I'm not sure about this, so all feedback is welcome, but this is the debut Quack Spout Podcast, enjoy! (Playlist below)

QUACK SPOUT - NUMBER ONE MP3

Playlist:

Attack + Defend - River Arrow
The Weather In Sweden - Twentysomethings
Hedluv - H30LUV
Kate Goes - Heartbeat
Duke Raoul - How Frightful
Charlot Webster - Dreamboat
Joy Of Sex - A Briefing
Colourmusic - Gospel Song
Threatmantics - Little Bird
Agnes Kain - All Time High

Tuesday 24 March 2009

Other Writings...

Morning all,

Here are some recent writings for a number of other websites I contribute to, t'would be greatly appreciated if you'd have a gander when you have some spare time:

The Celluloid President written for Battle Royale With Cheese
A look at the representation of the American president on the silver screen in recent times.

My Festival Year 2009 written for God Is In The TV
A preview of the music festivals across the country that I'll be attending.

A Look Back To The Future written for Battle Royale With Cheese
A material viewpoint on the first installment of the classic 80's time-travel comedy.

Ta ta!

Owain.x

Monday 9 March 2009

The 'What I Had For Dinner' Project Blog - 200th Day

Not a particularly momentous meal to mark the 200th day of the infamous 'What I Had For Dinner' project, but a tasty one nonetheless and a bottle of wine too... not intentionally however, I only realised this was the 200th day of the project (not the 200th meal due to non-dinner days) as I uploaded the photo to my computer.

So, this means there are only 165 dinners remaining, only 165 photos and only 3 more Facebook albums to create with 'hilarious' titles referencing movie sequels.

Saturday 14 February 2009

My Traditional 'Most Anticipated Films' List - Part Two (Preview)

Well, having just moved to Brighton and being a tad full of activity and procrastination and part-time employment, there's been a slight delay getting this list out there and - as a result - I've seen some of the films I was eagerly awaiting come the end of 2008 (I shall include them and my thoughts, and I've added a couple of other flicks that have entered my interest). Anyway, without further ado and in no particular order...

The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus

This has been on my 'most anticipated' list for a few years now, it's one of those ones that has - understandably now - been pushed back and back, it shall always be tagged as Heath Ledger's last film, but I'm hoping it's another on form Terry Gilliam movie, the concept sounds wonderful, the look of the few stills and set-snaps released so far is great and it has Tom Waits in it as the devil!

Where The Wild Things Are

Another delayed release, Spike Jonze's adaptation of Maurice Sendak's children's book looks to have captured the kind of magic that the Jim Henson company bottled for Labyrinth and The Dark Crystal, with a bit of the fluffiness of The Neverending Story thrown in for good measure. Jonze also seems to be keenly aware that a good children's film is dark and grown-up whilst still being fantastical, and hopefully he will get to fully realise his vision and all those talks of studio worries are just hearsay.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Here's one film I have now seen, I've been keeping an eye on this project for a while and seen a few director's names attached to it, the story appealed to me generally and I thought Fincher was a fine choice of helmsman. In the end the film is a technical marvel, visually stunning but a little cold emotionally. Many have compared it to Forrest Gump, but I felt that Gump managed to push the emotional buttons a little better than Button, though I think Fincher never intended to make something as sentimental as Zemeckis' Oscar winner.

Synedoche, New York

Charlie Kaufman, the writer of Being John Malkovich, returns with his directorial debut, and another film that seems - like Benjamin Button - to examine an entire life, albeit here in a more linear yet no less bizarre fashion. I'm still not entirely sure what the film is about, all I know is I can't wait.

JCVD

It's out on DVD now and hopefully I'll get around to watching it soon, but this film has been received raves recently for the film's look and - shockingly - the performance of Jean Claude Van Damme as he honestly and self-deprecatingly dismantles his own life and career in a darkly comic heist movie!?

The Box

There's something about Richard Kelly's follow-up to Donnie Darko - Southland Tales - that keeps me going back to it, it's awfully paced, ropily acted, the plot's a mess and it's way too long, but I find myself watching it more than most movies. I'm hoping he's put together a genuinely good film here, spring-boarding from a Richard Matheson short into a 70s-set thriller starring the dependable James Marsden and Cameron Diaz.

Sherlock Holmes

I'm not a Guy Ritchie fan, but I do love Robert Downey Jr. and Sherlock Holmes and foggy Victorian England romps, so hopefully this'll gel together nicely with this spin on Arthur Conan Doyle's legendary detective. I'm hoping this'll be a nice counterpoint to the brilliant and under-rated Young Sherlock Holmes.

The Brothers Bloom

I haven't seen Brick, I know I should. This looks like great fun and stars the always watchable Adrien Brody and the equally always watchable Mark Ruffalo as two con men, it seems to have an easy, quirky charm.

Milk

Sean Penn's performance eclipsed this film, which is - as I have seen it - a very well made biography of the first openly gay politician Harvey Milk, it has a fabulous supporting cast including Josh Brolin and James Franco, and a genuinely moving story and hopefully will pick up a few awards come Oscar season.

Kick-Ass

Matthew Vaughn directed the over-looked and magical Stardust, one of the best subversions of the fairy-tale genre since The Princess Bride and now he's turning his hand to superheroes with this graphic novel adaptation from the creator of Wanted. It looks barking mad from the few photos released and hopefully will mark the turnaround of Nic Cage's career (he has a supporting role).

The Spirit

Another one I've already seen, read my defense of it by CLICKING HERE!

Religulous

I enjoy a good documentary and this one looks like a funny investigation of how different people approach religion. It seems to be getting a bit of stick from some critics for being a bit too light, but I see this as a nice primer before having a look at some other interesting and thematically similar docs; check out Jesus Camp, it will scare you stupid!

Crank 2: High Voltage

The first Crank is (just over Taken) the finest guilty-pleasure of the 21st Century thus far, and hopefully this sequel will deliver more lunatic charm as Jason Stathan's presumed-dead hitman Chev Chelios finds his heart replaced by some kind of battery powered contraption that needs constant jolts of electricity to keep him ticking. I wasn't too sure about the recently released trailer, but I won't feel as ashamed as I probably should when I go to see this on opening day!

The Fantastic Mr. Fox

Stop-motion is in good stead this year with this and the critically adored Coraline on the way, not very much is known about how this is good to look yet, I'm feeling quite certain this may end up on next year's most-anticipated list, but I really hope it comes out this year. It's being directed by Wes Anderson and, of course, is an adaptation of the Roald Dahl children's book.

Knowing

Always dangerous looking forward to a Nic Cage movie, but with this and Kick-Ass on the way I'm hoping this is a better year for Cage than having Ghost Rider, Next and The Wicker Man in quick succession! Knowing, I hope, also marks a return to form for Alex Proyas who directed the excellent The Crow and Dark City but has floundered of late with I, Robot and Garage Days.

Watchmen

Another project I've had my peepers on for a while, it was one that Terry Gilliam developed for a time and ultimately decided it should be a mini-series. Then Paul Greengrass took the helm and got very close to a version I really, really wanted to see. Now Zack Snyder has actually managed to film the thing and I'm curious but uncertain; the cast is great, the visuals look good, the marketing has been smart but I was not a fan of 300 though Snyder's Dawn of the Dead remake was surprisingly effective.

The Wrestler

I was dissapointed by this, Mickey Rourke's performance is great, though his face is distracting at times, but overall the film was rather bland and Marisa Tomei is awful in her supporting role, alongside some very heavy-handed and terribly written scenes that layer on religous allegory with a trowel and Baseketball-like use of songs as Rourke drives around. I guess this is what happens when nobody goes to see a film as beautiful and heart-breaking as Aronofsky's previous effort The Fountain.

Star Trek

This looks like good fun, I don't really care about what they 'do' to Star Trek, I just hope J.J. Abrams puts together a ride as entertaining as his entry into the Mission: Impossible franchise and I'll be happily munching popcorn.

The Year One

Jack Black and Michael Cera are cave-men in this high/low-concept comedy from Harold Ramis who seems to have assembled a good cast to pull him out of the doldrums of fare like Bedazzled and Analyze That. I'm not expecting a classic here really, just a good solid laugh.

Che

I saw part one and it was pretty good; an interesting historical document but we learn next to nothing about the man the film is named after. I'm looking forward to part two, but I understand why - after it's Cannes success - this film has kind of drifted off of awards radars.

Hamlet 2

A Sundance hit last year, Steve Coogan plays a teacher who tries to revive his flagging career by putting together a brazen, brash and bonkers musical sequel to Shakespeare's most famous play.

The Princess and the Frog

Hand drawn 2D animated Walt Disney returns with this New Orleans set fairy-tale update, which looks like a throwback to the early 90s-era of Disney animation (The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, etc.).

Terminator: Salvation

Charlie's Angels director McG seems to have put together a welcome continuation of the man vs. machines saga, finally taking us to see what all this Future War stuff is about. The recently released trailer looks like the action is being handled well, and the cast will hopefully lend it some gravitas and, regarding his recent outburst, though he over-reacted I'm on Mr. Bale's side.

Bruno

Sacha Baron Cohen puts his neck on the line again this time as gay TV host Bruno, he'll be exposing people's dormant prejudices once more in faux-documentary style and hopefully it'll be as successful as the surprisingly enjoyable Borat movie.

Up

Pixar's next, it looks interesting, though very little has been revealed thus far beyond a brief look at the character dynamics of the grumpy old man and the eager, wide-eyed boy scout; but it should be fun.

Coraline

Henry Selick returns to feature length stop-motion animation after mixing live-action into the pretty good James and the Giant Peach and the misguided but interesting Monkeybone. Here he adapts Neil Gaiman's spooky children's story, filming it in 3D for a film that some critics are already hailing as a classic.

Nailed

I am always interested in David O'Russell's work, I've enjoyed every film he's done so far, with each new release out-doing the one before; I don't think he can top I Heart Huckabees in my opinion, but I look forward to see what he's come up with.

Extract

The new Mike Judge film after the unfairly treated cult-classic Idiocracy, the man really knows how to put together a sharp, wry and strange comedy so this should be worth a gander.

Moon

David Bowie's son directs two Sam Rockwells in this wonderfully mad sounding sci-fi that seems to be picking up the mantle where the 70s left off and delivering something truly different.

Monday 19 January 2009

My Traditional 'Most Anticipated Films' List - Part One (Review)

On my old blog I used to (I may have done it about two or three years running) always write up a list of films I was looking forward to over the coming year, and then review the previous year's list of most anticipated films and see if they lived up to my own, personal hype. I'm going to continue that centuries old tradition here for the sake of clinging onto the past. But I shall divvy it up into two posts, the first will review my 'Most Anticipated Films of 2008' and the second shall be my all new list of films. So, without furtherado let's jump in the way back machine and see what I was looking forward to at the end of 2007...

1. Blindness (dir. Fernando Meirelles)

My most anticipated film ended up being the last film I saw at the cinema in 2008, and though it was a well made, brilliantly acted film that stuck very closely to Jose Saramago's masterwork of a novel, it just lacked enough of an impact to really make it feel essential; and where many people spoke of it being too bleak I didn't feel it was quite bleak enough! It sits in the same category as 'Children of Men' but has nowhere near the wallop of that masterpiece.

2. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (dir. Steven Spielberg)

A huge dissapointment. I do want to give it one last spin on DVD before putting the final nail on my opinion; this was the first Indy film I saw at the cinema and was a garish, poorly plotted, muddled and CG-saturated affair that had a tiny handful of good bits, but was generally quite embarassing.

3. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (dir. Julian Schnabel)

An incredible, visceral, beautiful, emotive film that keeps growing in my conciousness as a truly special movie that I want to point other people towards and Mathieu Almaric deserved much more recognition than he got for an amazing performance; amazing in how much he conveys doing so little.

4. There Will Be Blood (dir. P.T. Anderson)

Anderson evolved as a director with this, I am curious as to his next move; but this is a film that shall last.

5. Persepolis (dir. Vincent Paronnaud, Marjane Satrapi)

This got nudged aside at the last minute by Waltz With Bashir for the 'coveted' title of best animated film of the year, but it's still a fascinating, individual and personal tale brilliantly told and drawn.

6. The Dark Knight (dir. Christopher Nolan)

Highly enjoyable with some great performance, but really I felt like this was a strange mash-up of 'Batman Returns' and 'Heat' and whilst that seemed to be what many people wanted, it wasn't quite the mind-blowing experience many others thought it to be.

7. Teeth (dir. Mitchell Lichtenstein)

I've been harping on about this being 'the modern Heathers', it's a exploitational tale told in a smart, restrained and often surreal way. It's blackly comic, bold and confrontational, with scenes shifting style at will. It sparked a small whimper of debate, but I think it will have legs on DVD.

8. Be Kind Rewind (dir. Michel Gondry)

A very uneven film, yet highly watchable thanks to Mos Def's charismatic leading turn and Gondry's lo-fi visual kinetics. A bit of fluff inbetween, I expect, better work from Gondry.

9. Son of Rambow (dir. Garth Jennings)

Absolutely charming love-letter to the 80s, cinema, childhood and the power of the imagination with some of the best child performances in a while and some delightfully barmy sequences; Will Proudfoot's first bonkers imagining post-Rambo always makes me grin like a loon. Garth Jennings really captured the flighty, crazy logic of a young boy's imagination.

10. No Country For Old Men / Burn After Reading (dir. The Coen Brothers)

No Country... was a great, stark thriller very similar to the Coen's earliest film, Blood Simple. Burn After Reading was a messy, misjudged, awkward, starry 'comedy' more akin to recent dissapointments like Intolerable Cruelty.

11. Tropic Thunder (dir. Ben Stiller)

A bit of a mess, only Downey Jr. really seemed to get a hook on his character and the film ran with that in the marketting department. Otherwise it has moments, but isn't as inspired overall as Zoolander.

12. Jumper (dir. Doug Liman)

Much like the first X-Men film this feels very incomplete, I wouldn't object to a sequel as there was a story just starting to take shape here. Hayden Christensen wasn't unbearable, but the film was stolen by Jamie Bell's far superior co-jumper.

13. Wall-E (dir. Andrew Stanton)

A great film, but not quite the incendiary re-shaping of the way we perceive animation that I was expecting... the satire, similar in ways to Mike Judge's Idiocracy was a nice, dark touch in a surprisingly sweet film.

14. Synedoche, New York (dir. Charlie Kaufman)

Released in 2009.

15. The Happening (dir. M. Night Shyamalan)

My word, this was a terrible film. I look forward to renting this with some friends, drinking a lot, eating pizzas and hopefully laughing our heads off. Because watching this in the cinema was a painful, baffling experience.

16. Inkheart (dir. Iain Softley)

A very book bound movie, adapted, as it was, from a novel; this doesn't managed to reshape its source material into a compelling film, but does have a good share of ideas and a really great performance by Paul Bettany.

17. Where the Wild Things Are (dir. Spike Jonze)

Released in 2009 (hopefully)!

18. Hellboy 2: The Golden Army (dir. Guillermo Del Toro)

Upped the monster quota and had some grander, better set-pieces that the first film, this kind of fudged it in the emotional and story stakes with some real gaping plot-holes and some awkward character arcs.

19. Dante 01 (dir. Marc Caro)

This went straight to video and I still haven't got around to watching it...

20. Coraline (dir. Henry Selick)

Released in 2009.

Saturday 17 January 2009

Seat 13 - Issue One


Back in October I started thinking, very seriously, about putting together a film magazine. I e-mailed some people I thought might write for it, I also spoke to a gallery about getting cover art from one of their artists, and the response I got from everyone was so positive that the magazine move forward at quite a rapid pace.

Things got a little delayed, which, in the end, turned out to be beneficial. I found a couple of additional contributions that I really like, and started e-mailing a couple of printers. The cost of doing a professional print-run though seemed a little steep, so I thought about tackling all the printing myself. After printing out two and a bit issues I realised that I'd be spending a small fortune on ink so went to my local photocopiers and got twenty issues (bar the cover which I am still printing myself) done there. It was around this time that I started to think; I hope I can sell some advertising space in issue two!

I'm really proud of the magazine, I love how its all turned out, I'm really pleased with the quality of the articles and contributions, I am so thankful to everyone who has contributed to this first issue and I look forward to collaborating with them again on future issues. But, there's that whole tricky business of trying to sell something that is home-made and the cynicism that you can face as a result. My instinct was to charge £2 an issue, but, after a friend had a look at a draft copy we agreed that £1 was probably more realistic in a way... though, from a recouping costs point if view, not so!

What I hope with this first issue is that I can get a small audience that will want to read the next issue, this first issue is special in that I don't think issue two will be advert free, I don't think issue two will have the same paper for the cover and maybe I will go to a printers for the whole affair. This has been a real learning experience, I wish I had the resources to keep producing the magazine to a similar level, but I know now I've got to find that middle-ground between ambition and finances.


If anyone reading this would like to buy a copy you can order it by clicking HERE.

You can also join the Facebook group HERE.

Tuesday 6 January 2009

Records Of The Year 2008

Following on from my favourite films of 2008, I now present to you my favourite records of the year, this time in alphabetical order by artist (with links to my original reviews where appropriate):

Beck - Modern Guilt

Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago

Colourmusic - f, monday, orange, february, venus, lunatic, 1 or 13

Dan Le Sac vs. Scroobius Pip - Angles

Alex Dingley - I Lost My Honey In The Grass

Flight of the Conchords - Flight of the Conchords

Fredrick Stanley Star - Heaviside Layer

Hedluv - Cosmic Sounds

Joan As Police Woman - To Survive


Kate Goes - Happy Dancing EP

Elspeth Anne Macrae - Wood Closet Songs EP

Stephen Malkmus - Real Emotional Trash

Rivulets - You Are My Home

Shearwater - Rook

Threatmantics - Upbeat Love

The Voluntary Butler Scheme - Tomatoes, Pepper, Garlic + Mushrooms EP

The Weather In Sweden - I Break The Ice, I Broke Your Heart


James Yorkston - When The Haar Rolls In

Thursday 1 January 2009

Films of the Year 2008

Well, 2008 is now done and dusted, and so I shall be posting my 'Best Of' lists. I'm going to start with my favourite films that I saw at the cinema over the past 365 days, feel free to comment, complain or compliment my choices!


1. The Fall

The second feature from music video and commercials director Tarsem, after the visually stunning yet in-all-other-aspects flawed 'The Cell', is an absolutely amazing film that completely surprised me in its spectacle and heart. It is a story about storytelling in much the same way as 'The Princess Bride' yet the story being told is an escape for both characters; a little girl (best child performance I have ever seen) with a broken arm and a stunt-man suffering serious depression. In its fantasy sequences it is a work of art, pushing its visuals as far as it pushes the emotions, and in its reality sequences it is tender, dark and heart-breaking stuff. I truly hope this film finds an audience on DVD because it is one of the best films I have ever seen.

2. Die Welle

Critics seem to be giving 'Die Welle' a hard time in a similar way to 'The Fall', for all its effect this film has been criticised for the archetypes it presents, but, for me, I found that to be a huge part of its power. The impetus for this film is a real experiment conducted by a teacher in his class asking the question about whether another dictatorship could arise in modern Germany, and his class seem sure that it couldn't and he goes farther than he expected in proving them wrong. The use of highly identifiable, almost American teen movie, archetypes here is what made the film so affecting, in some ways this is a John Hughes movie gone very, very wrong! But, more seriously, it is a troubling and provactive drama brilliantly acted by a great ensemble.

3. The Diving-Bell and the Butterfly

Another true story, this one tells of Jean-Dominique Bauby who suffered a stroke and had to live with an almost totally paralyzed body at the age of 43. Thanks to a nurse he managed to dictate his story, his thoughts and feelings, by the blinking of one eyelid and what he produced, and what director Julian Schnabel (Basquiat, another over-looked masterwork) has adapted here is a truly human, beautiful and uplifting story.

4. In Bruges

I never would have thought a 'gangster' movie would have made my top 5, but this is not another bog-standard Guy Ritchie clone. Taking the dark comedy to wonderful, sweary, violent and offensive heights this is the surprisingly touching, and laugh-out-loud hilarious tale of two hitmen (Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson, both excellent) sent to the quiet Belgian town of Bruges to lay low, they don't quite succeed.

5. There Will Be Blood

There's probably not much more I can say about this film than has been said already, such was the awards frenzy around it and, in particular, Daniel Day Lewis's monumental performance. But this film truly marked Paul Thomas Anderson (Magnolia, Boogie Nights) as a truly great and incredibly versatile director, Lord knows how he's going to follow this!?

6. Wanted

A Matrix-lite action movie starring James MacAvoy and Angelina Jolie from the director of Nightwatch? Here's another film I never expected to make my top 10, but 'Wanted' did what so few action movies of current times have done; be fun. A great throwback to 80s action cinema but with 21st century flourishes, this is unashamedly over-the-top, violent and often funny with a charismatic lead turn from MacAvoy and great support, especially from Morgan Freeman. It's not going to change the world, but it's one of the best beer and pizza films in ages.

7. Waltz With Bashir

Visually stunning, this animated documentary seemed to be just a curiosity, but it is one of the best examinations of the effect of war on a soldier and the existential crisis that can follow since the work of Kurt Vonnegut and Joseph Heller.

8. Teeth

Even moreso than 'Wanted' I would say this film is not going to be for everyone! This tale of the vagina dentata seems to switch genre with every scene and is held together by the wonderful performance of Jess Weixler. But this film is one of the finest and edgiest dark teen comedies since 'Heathers'.

9. Son Of Rambow

A great family movie which is both a love-letter to the 80s as it is a celebration of the kind of family-movies the British Children's Film Workshop used to produce on an almost weekly basis! With two wonderful child performances (with this, The Fall, Eden Lake, Somer's Town, I think 2008 may have been an amazing year for young actors) and so much warmth, wit and heart this film will hopefully live a long life as a film for all generations, or at least, all those who fondly remember Rambo!

10. The Orphanage

Another great child performance here from Simon Princep, as the son who goes missing and causes a truly spooky and chilling journey to take place in this throwback to good old haunted house horrors, but with an intelligence often missing from similar efforts. Beyond all of that though 'The Orphanage' makes this top ten by being really, really, really scary and not just relying on cheap shocks - well, there is one scene that will make you jump, laugh it off and then really jump!

11. Man On Wire

Another documentary that is a brilliant study of artistic passion and ambition, building towards a dazzling, vertigo-inducing and magical piece of performance art on a tiny wire stretched between the World Trade Centre towers. An excellently told story that paints a funny, stunning and occasionally sad portrait of obsession.

12. The Mist

Another film I think will grow and grow on home cinema formats. This is the first time that Frank Darabont (The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile) has adapted a Stephen King horror story and he does so in uncompromising fashion, making the key choice that in all 'scary' situations it's other people you have to fear the most rather than whatever supernatural creature may be trying to eat you! With an excellent cast and a dark heart this is a modern horror classic akin to John Carpenter's 'The Thing'.

13. Slumdog Millionaire

Danny Boyle genres hops again, after sci-fi (Sunshine) and zombies (28 Days Later), by going Bollywood with this touching, heart-warming, funny, sad and beautiful tale of a young man who finds himself going from India's slums to the last question on 'Who Wants To Be A Millionaire'. He is interrogated by the police as to how he's 'cheated' his way into this position and he relates his life story to them, explaining how each question has had some relevance in his journey.

14. Persepolis

Adaptation of the graphic novel about an outspoken young girl growing up during the Islamic revolution, similar to Art Spiegelman's graphic novel 'Maus', this features Marjane Satrapi's family telling a range of tales about survival and support, and Marjane relating her own up-rooted sense of self in a strange time to be a young girl and a teenager. Beautifully animated and respectfully told, this is a truly unique film.

15. Wall-E

Not quite the incredible experience I was expecting, nevertheless, Pixar manage to make another dazzling animated feature that surprises by managing to be one of the year's finest romances (between two robots) and a very dark satire on the future of the human-race. Above all this is funny and heart-warming, though I personally still wished that the entire film was a silent movie and that they had used live-action actors for the humans all the way through.